The hedge fund has cut its exposure to 1.04 million shares worth over USD 618 million as of March 31, 2016, from 3.19 million shares worth USD 2.16 billion in the December quarter, according to a filing at the US SEC.

The fund also entirely dissolved its stake in Alibaba Group Holding.

Besides, it has brought down its stake in Chinese e-tailer JD.com (by about 25 percent) and Apple (over 46 percent).

Tiger Global has taken stake in Zillow Group, which provides real estate and mortgage information, valued at about USD 23.6 million at the end of the quarter.

Over the past few months, Flipkart has also faced a series of markdowns from its investors.

A T Rowe Price-managed mutual fund had marked it down by 15 percent in April while Morgan Stanley-backed mutual fund had done so by 27 percent in February, according to reports.

Amazon India, Flipkart and Snapdeal are currently locked in a battle for market leadership in the burgeoning Indian e-commerce sector.

The three firms have been aggressively spending billions of dollars on marketing, strengthening their supply chains and acquiring customers with predatory discounts.